The Hamilton College Style Sheet

Essentials of English Usage

Fragment("f")

Every sentence must have a subject and predicate (unless a subject or predicate is clearly understood or implied).

In each of the examples below, the second statement is not a sentence but a sentence fragment.

1. Old Testament stories portray two types of leader. The brainy leader and the one who relies on his physical strength.
[Incorrect: the fragment is an appositive* detached from its antecedent and punctuated as a complete sentence. Correction: join the sentence parts by a comma, a colon, or a dash after the first leader.]

2. I surveyed the party. The furniture overturned, empty cans lying on the floor, and a funky smell coming from the bathroom.
[Incorrect: participial phrase punctuated as a complete sentence. Correction: change overturned, lying, and coming from to finite forms of the verbs--i.e., was overturned, were lying, was coming from.]

3. Hamlet thinks of his father's ghost frequently. Which almost makes him insane.
[Incorrect: subordinate clause punctuated as a complete sentence. Correction: join the subordinate element to the main element: Hamlet's frequent thoughts of his father's ghost almost make him insane.]